Clinical and neuroimaging characteristics of primary progressive aphasia

Donna C. Tippett, Zafer Keser

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter

Abstract

The chapter covers the clinical syndrome of a primary progressive aphasia (PPA), the demographics of this rare neurodegenerative disease, defining clinical and neuroanatomic characteristics of each PPA variant, disease progression, and behavioral features. The chapter begins with a brief introduction that includes references to seminal papers that defined this clinical syndrome and its three variants. The classic PPA subtypes discussed in the chapter are semantic variant PPA (svPPA), nonfluent/agrammatic PPA (nfaPPA), and logopenic variant PPA (lvPPA). The key language and cognitive characteristics, and language tasks that can elicit these language impairments, are detailed. Overlap in the clinical profiles of the PPA variants, which make differential diagnosis challenging, are explained. Disease progression is described, revealing that the PPA variants become more similar over time. Although PPA is language-predominant dementia, there are behavioral manifestations, particularly in svPPA. Changes in behavior in this variant are addressed as well as behavioral changes in nfaPPA and lvPPA that are less well recognized. The patterns of atrophy in the left temporal, parietal, and/or frontal cortices unique to each PPA variant are described. The underlying neuropathologies of the PPA variants are discussed, specifically tauopathies and non-tauopathies associated with svPPA and nfaPPA and Alzheimer's disease pathology in lvPPA.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Title of host publicationHandbook of Clinical Neurology
PublisherElsevier B.V.
Pages81-97
Number of pages17
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2022

Publication series

NameHandbook of Clinical Neurology
Volume185
ISSN (Print)0072-9752
ISSN (Electronic)2212-4152

Keywords

  • Language
  • Logopenic variant primary progressive aphasia
  • Neurodegenerative
  • Neuroimaging
  • Nonfluent agrammatic primary progressive aphasia
  • Primary progressive aphasia
  • Semantic variant primary progressive aphasia

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Clinical Neurology
  • Neurology

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